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Wikimedia Commons · Public domain · Hover to magnify, click for fullscreen
Original fileThe image is a monochrome black-and-white engraving on a white background, organized into six labeled figures. Fig. 1 shows a cross-section of the cerebrum; Fig. 2 presents a long, vertical spinal cord with numbered vertebrae; Fig. 3 displays the ventral surface of the brain including the optic nerves and cerebellum; Fig. 4 shows the brain stem from a posterior perspective; Fig. 5 highlights the internal branching structure of the cerebellum; and Fig. 6 is a minor detail showing a nerve filament. The illustrations use fine cross-hatching and line work to denote texture and depth, with various parts marked by letters and numbers for reference keying.
This print is an anatomical plate from the work of Herman Boerhaave, an influential 18th-century Dutch physician and botanist whose systematized approach to clinical medicine and physiology was foundational to modern medical education.
Pag. 72 Tab XXIII Fig. 1. C. ad interiora reclinatum Fig. 2. M Fig. 3. d L Q W F Fig. 4. N P O Q U Fig. 5. H G Fig. 6. c F. Deven Sculp.
Translation
Page 72; Plate XXIII; Fig 1. C. reclining toward the interior; Fig 6. c (refers to a root or fiber); F. Deven Engraver.
Herman Boerhaave
The engraving is based on anatomical studies conducted or compiled by Boerhaave for his medical treatises.
Object
Engraving
anatomical
Digital Source
Unknown · Public domain
Linked Data
AI AI-cataloged fields generated by gemini-3.1-flash-lite-preview on April 18, 2026. Getty identifiers are AI-inferred and may require verification.